On September 3, 2004, the faculty held an orientation meeting with the incoming class of students. At this meeting, they outlined the memo from August 23, 2004, which explained that the program had adopted the positions of the APA on “same-sex marriage” and same sex parenting. (See Parts, I, II, III, IV, and V of this series).
The faculty also indicated that they would not write letters of recommendation for any student who did not approve of “same-sex marriage” or same-sex parenting. The faculty further indicated that anyone who was found to be “discriminatory” toward “LGBT” individuals had no place in the program. According to them, “healers” could not take positions contrary to the political allies of the homosexual movement.
On September 7, 2004, Mr. Ford had a follow up meeting with ProfessorWetchler. During that meeting, Wetchler inquired as to whether Mr. Ford had changed his views on “same-sex marriage” and again insisted that Mr. Ford apologize for writing the letter to the editor. Mr. Ford stated that his views on the subject had not changed and that he would not apologize for exercising his First Amendment freedoms.
In the fall of 2004, Professor Hecker’s ethics class focused on reparative therapy, which is therapy for those who wish to overcome attraction to members of the same sex. At the end of class on September 29, 2004, she handed out worksheets that described an ethical dilemma. This dilemma involved a male, church-going therapist who recommended that a client and his family consider reparative therapy and directed them to the National Association of Research andTherapy of Homosexuality (NARTH). This counseling involved reparative therapy, which Hecker characterized as completely unethical.
At the beginning of class on October 6, 2004, Professor Hecker passed out new worksheets, stating that the old ones were incorrect. The new worksheets involved a female church-going therapist who was counseling a client whose parents believed that homosexuality was a sin. But the rest of the details remained unchanged.
During the ethics class, Professor Hecker spent six class hours discussing an article she had co-authored with Ms. Duffy-Greslo, which consistently portrayed nonreligious individuals as tolerant, healthy, mature, and well-developed. In contrast, it portrayed religiously orthodox people as stunted, immature, and less developed.
During October of 2004, Professor Hecker began evaluating Mr. Ford’s work with scrutiny she did not apply to others. For the first time, she began requiring
Mr. Ford to rewrite his case notes. This is something he had never been required to do before. And she required him to do so four times. As clinical supervisor, she would review the case notes of students. She would note minor errors on “post-it” notes, but she would record more substantial errors on formal sheets that featured a check list of possible infractions.
During this month, Mr. Ford received fifteen of these formal infraction sheets for his case notes. However, none of the boxes on the checklist were marked. Instead, Professor Hecker had written the infraction in the margin. When Mr. Ford compared his evaluated case notes with other students, he discovered that he had made the same errors as his fellow students. But Hecker gave the other students the informal “post-it” note reminders while she issued him the formal infraction sheets. Mr. Ford was the only student to whom Hecker gave the formal infraction sheets.
On October 26, 2004, Professor Hecker encountered Mr. Ford in the hallway and assigned him several new articles from The Journal of Marriage and Family Therapy and instructed him to read them in preparation for class the following day. The articles pertained to reparative therapy. Mr. Ford informed Hecker that he had already read them.
In class on October 27, 2004, Defendant Hecker tried to discuss the articles she had assigned from The Journal of Marriage and Family Therapy the day before. Since very few students had read them, the discussion faltered. So instead, Defendant Hecker started discussing how the LDS Church had refused to accept blacks as members until relatively recently. At one point, she asked the class: “How could a church not allow blacks to become members until the 1970s?”
After these experiences, Mr. Ford and Dr. Byrd discussed taking legal action against Purdue. But again, Mr. Ford feared that doing so would jeopardize his graduation and instead opted to document the abuses for future reference.
Continued... |